On 17/9/22 01:48, stan via users wrote:
On Fri, 16 Sep 2022 14:55:11 +1000
"Michael D. Setzer II via users" <users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I've run this little script from time to time in /
find . -xtype l >/badlinks 2>ERR
grep -v '/proc\|/run' </badlinks >/badlinks-clean
At present ends up with other 300 lines in the
badlinks-clean
Cleaned up a number of bad lines in a jre directory that
seemed to be left over stuff from fc27 to fc33? Nothing
from fc34?? and the reset were the currect fc35 files I
have on system. Seems things that just got left??
Not sure if it is coming to have these on a system?
Wonder if someone with a lot more knowledge than I
have might know best option. Just leave them, remove
some, remove all? Figured the ones in /proc and /run
should be left alone??
I don't have a lot more knowledge than you do, but a symbolic link that
points to nothing, is broken, is useless. Anything that depends on
finding what it expects at the end of the link is going to break.
So, my opinion is that removing them is harmless. If your system is
working correctly, then leaving them is also harmless, other than the
cruft it represents, because they aren't being accessed (or you would
be getting errors).
The proc / run links are temporary, in that the proc / run filesystem
is created each boot, so deleting them is pointless. It doesn't make
sense that there are all those broken links. Could the find be
incorrect in some way? By that I mean that it is issuing false
positives. When I run the command
find /proc -L -type l | less
or
find /run -L -type l | less
I get no broken links.
Just an FYI, I've issued ll /run/systemd/units and on my system
that folder contains nothing but symlinks and everyone of them are
pointing at files that don't exist. If these are created every boot,
then what is FC36 doing wrong to create invalid symlinks?
regards,
Steve
From the find man page for -type l,
l symbolic link; this is never true if the -L option or the
-follow option is in effect, unless the symbolic link is broken. If
you want to search for symbolic links when -L is in effect, use
-xtype.
So, using find /proc -L -type l returns true if a link is broken. Note
that the default for find is -P, never follow symbolic links, which
your command will use.
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